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http://www.wjla.com/news/stories/0408/514346.html



WJLA.com

April 24, 2008

Washington



A pilot's laptop, filled with top secret security information was

reported missing at Dulles Airport and the ripple effects were felt

across the country.



The Mesa Airlines employee couldn't find the personal laptop he brought

with him while co-piloting a United Express flight from Birmingham,

Alabama to Dulles International Airport (web|news) .



17 airports were forced to make emergency changes to access codes at

Dulles, Atlanta, Phoenix, Chicago's O'Hare and San Antonio.



Various officials within the airline industry admit that with these

access codes, someone who went though security could, with the touch of

a few buttons, get onto a plane or get outside, right below a plane.



A TSA spokesperson said, "On April 17, Mesa Airlines notified TSA that

an employee reported a laptop, containing confidential information, had

been misplaced, lost or stolen."



Federal and airline officials admitted that the classified codes on the

computer provided the pilot, through a keypad, access from the gate to

the plane and down to ground level right below the plane.



Passengers were appalled. "That's just a major security breach for

everyone that flies within the United States."



One airline insider tells ABC 7 News the laptop was probably stored in

an overhead compartment used by passengers and likely stolen.



Federal officials quickly contacted 17 U.S. airports used by the pilot,

warning them of the security breach. Media representatives for a number

of those airports affected, including Dulles, Phoenix and Akron-Canton

said the codes were promptly changed. ABC 7 News learned one security

official at a midwest airport rushed to work in the middle of the night

to prevent a breach.



A Mesa Airlines spokesperson said, "Any breach of aviation security is

of primary concern to Mesa Airlines and we are fully cooperating with

the TSA."



Meanwhile, a TSA official said the agency, "may look at increasing the

standards for anyone who stores this type of information on their

computers."



Airline officials said they have very little to go on because they don't

know if the pilot was targeted or if it was a crime of opportunity. A

spokesperson for Dulles said airport police are investigating.





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